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#97569 - 11/09/01 05:41 AM
Re: Fantom not an arranger, but---
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Member
Registered: 10/09/01
Posts: 82
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To all, Interesting points made by all. One of the most interesting I find as a common thread, most all here seem to equate professionalism and creating pro/real/serious music with the equipment one uses. Following that logic, I'd ask you to consider this: Would I. Pearlman, YoYo Ma, S.R.Vaughn, S. Wonder, C. Atkins,E. Johnson on and on be any less the professional if they were creating on less expensive equipment? Thinking that buying a $3000. guitar as opposed to a $300. guitar is somehow miraculosly turning one into a pro great player....c'mon. To be sure a Strad. violin sounds a whole lot better than a Palatino Pearlman would sound great on either and probably 99% of the people sitting in the audience wouldn't know the difference. The 1% that's left, is us the musicians who could hear the difference. Don't totally misunderstand me, if you've been to my site, you can see I have quite a bit invested in high end equipment and love it, but I don't think that's the debate here. Also those who look down at those of us that may prefer arrangers for whatever reason: If one is a keyboard player say in the jazz genre.....Thelonius Monk or Oscar Peterson, didn't play a synth, just straight piano. Does that make a jazz synth pianist not a real "Pro"....of course not. All of the equipment is just tools and taking advantage of the technology available. If one plays in a band....you're doing exactly the same thing that an arranger keyboard does. 1,2,3,4 and the band starts to play, you don't run to each instrument and play it, even in the studio. Think about Sgt. Peppers or Thriller or Dark Side of The Moon and all the tricks that went into produing these great albums. Are they not "pro" for using all the tricks to create a great album? Jupiter....those are violins (that I play) in the picture. Yes that is a Karma too. If you look at my original post I had a Karma, then a Motif. The only thing I bumrapped them for was being too complex to be of value to me. I spent more time tweeking and stuff than making music. Also, to me they are far more slanted to dance and techno music and that isn't what I do. I'm rather surprised with your excellent musical backround that you would be so judgemental. Although your last post toned it down a bit. The one last analogy I want to make is, are we cheating driving cars with automatic transmission instead of stick shift...I don't think so and driving either says nothing about one's driving ability. What I suppose I'm trying to express in this thread is: You want to take the first giant leap to being a pro? Then leave the musical snobbery at the front door and accept others music for what it is....creative expression. Appreciate it for that, not some judgemental baggage that you bring to the table about "pros" use......that's just a big boys peeing contest of I'm better than you are because..... jam on, Terry
[This message has been edited by Jocko (edited 11-09-2001).]
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#97575 - 11/09/01 12:51 PM
Re: Fantom not an arranger, but---
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Member
Registered: 10/09/01
Posts: 82
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Mike, Interesting observations by both you and your daughter. Here's what somewhat surprises me though from you daughter. Her generation is basically the one that invented the guy standing behind a couple of people and what he is doing is punching buttons on a box containing samples, I'm not sure how "real" that is, or what level of musicianship (depending on how you are defining it in your post)that is either. That's not to say its good or bad, because on that we can agree...it's purely subjective. The other thing one should consider about real vs fake.....what instrument does a synth sound emulate in the real world? None. It is an invented bunch of oscillators and FX and envelopes etc. There is nothing "real" about that sound except the emulation of itself. Does that make it a real instrument....define your terms of real.If one is willing to accept that sound as real, then logically one would have to accept any sound that comes off a synth as being real, as it is only emulating that which it is...a synth sound, it may happen to sound like a flute or whatever, but it's not. a synth may sound like a piano, but it's not a piano, it only emulates one with sound generators and the like, so is it real or fake? I think a lot of us here judging by the posts can remember pre synth days, when the first strange hi tech thing to hit the market was the Fender Rhodes and were it not for the likes of Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock who introduced them respectfully into a new type of jazz, those babies might have gone the wayside. Or when the first DX7 hit the streets. I once long ago read a definition of Musicianship: "The constant striving to improve ones abilities and the their creative process." If we can accept that defintion then the rest of this debate in this thread is just rhetoric. Terry
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#97577 - 11/09/01 02:14 PM
Re: Fantom not an arranger, but---
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Member
Registered: 10/31/00
Posts: 233
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Originally posted by Arbaz: ...you can do everything on an arranger as in any workstation at least now a days it is possible arranger keyboards were different 10-15 years ago when you was stuck with presets drum beats and auto acc. that is not the case any more right now you can do everything on a arranger from scratch and more ...... You could well be describing a workstation there Arbaz, in that you say "you can do everything on an arranger as in any workstation" (you are "likening a workstation to an arranger in other words). Try listening to the Fantom video Demo, and you will find out that you don't need to be a rocket scientist to make a tune up. The sequencer on this thing is so easy to use... I think it is when you start talking about creating songs "TOTALLY" from scratch, without any preset Ryhthms etc. But most, if not all workstations have this sort of facility now, and are much easier to get round, and create Proffessional Music. Same as My Dad says everytime I turn on my KN6500, crank up a Rhythm, and start soloing over the top he says "You should get stuck into your Piano studies, you will never get anywhere with that "do-it-yourself" keyboard The Only Backing my dad had when he was performing, was the applause of the Crowd!. And as someone told my DAD: "Organist & keyboard players are two a penny, but few can entertain With a Piano alone, like you". Don't even start me on this "Djing" stuff, in which the "Performer" who dares to call himself Musically gifted........ J5
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